The rule for the sale of your main home (primary residence) has an exclusion amount of the long term capital gain if you meet the 2 out of 5 year rule of living in your main home (primary residence. Go to the IRS gov web site and use the search box for Topic 701 - Sale of Your Home If you have a gain from the sale of your main home, you may qualify to exclude all or part of that gain from your income. Publication 523, Selling Your Home, provides rules and worksheets.
1) Generally it is very difficult to shift income to a child. 2) Why shift capital gain income anyway, it's the same rate for everyone? 3) Primary residences are exempt from gains, unless something like a million $. 4) Any tax, especially on sale of a residence, can depend much on what you do with the proceeds, and the reason for the sale.
no, it can be capital gain or loss
Yes, you are subject to capital gains tax on the gain on the sale of your principal residence that exceeds the maximum exclusion ($250,000 if Single / $500,000 if Married Filing Joint.) The old rule allowed you to defer paying tax on a home sale by "buying up" and rolling the gain into the new residence. You do that by reducing the basis of the new residence. Note that the old rule was always intended as a deferral of tax, not a tax exclusion. Because you were allowed to defer tax on prior sales, the basis of your current residence is likely low. This results in a large gain on sale that, unfortunately, may put you over the maximum exclusion. Note, however, you will only be taxed on the portion of gain that exceeds the maximum exclusion. For example, if your gain is $600,000 and you file Married Filing Jointly, you will only be taxed on $100,000 of gain ($600,000 gain minus $500,000 exclusion.)
Capital gain tax's applies to the moneys that you make on top (profit) of what you paid for the house ... and that would depend on what state you live in ...
The rule for the sale of your main home (primary residence) has an exclusion amount of the long term capital gain if you meet the 2 out of 5 year rule of living in your main home (primary residence. Go to the IRS gov web site and use the search box for Topic 701 - Sale of Your Home If you have a gain from the sale of your main home, you may qualify to exclude all or part of that gain from your income. Publication 523, Selling Your Home, provides rules and worksheets.
Your Main home (primary residence) The rule for the sale of your main home (primary residence) has an exclusion amount of the long term capital gain if you meet the 2 out of 5 year rule of living in your main home (primary residence. Go to the IRS gov web site and use the search box for Topic 701 - Sale of Your Home In general, you are eligible for the exclusion if you have owned and used your home as your main home for a period aggregating at least two years out of the five years prior to its sale. Refer to Publication 523 for the complete eligibility requirements as well as exceptions to the two year rule. Report the sale of your main home only if you have a gain that is not excluded from your income. In most cases, if you have a gain that is not excluded, you must report it on Form 1040, Schedule D (PDF), Capital Gains and Losses. IRS gov web site use the search box for Publication 523 Selling Your Home
Probably the biggest difference is the tax consequences. Different investments get taxes at different rates. Consider you can have a capital gain on the sale of your primary residence of up to $500,000 and NO tax liability for a husband and wife as long as it was their primary residence for 2 of the last 5 years.
Yes this could be very possible depending on the amount of the gain that you had on the sale of your primary residence. And if you have a 1099 in your hand it would be a good idea to report the transaction on your 1040 federal income tax return for the year of the sale.
You just have to be careful and not get carried away with this land amount that will be a part of the sale of your home (primary residence) that would be free of income tax for the exclusion amount in the year 2010. The home sale exclusion may include gain from the sale of vacant land that has been used as part of the residence, if the land sale occurs within two years before or after the sale of the residence. Taxpayers need not allocate gain between business and residential use if the business use occurred within the same dwelling unit as the residential use. They must pay tax on the gain equal to the total depreciation they took after May 6, 1997, but may exclude any additional gain on the residence, up to the maximum amount. If the business use property was separate from the dwelling unit, they would allocate the gain and be able to exclude only the gain on the residential unit.
A business residence sold yes all of the gain would be subject to income taxes. This could be very possible. Personal residence (main home) some of the long term capital gain could be taxable if the rules or met for this purpose. Your Main home (primary residence) The rule for the sale of your main home (primary residence) has an exclusion amount of the long term capital gain if you meet the 2 out of 5 year rule of living in your main home (primary residence. Go to the IRS gov web site and use the search box for Topic 701 - Sale of Your Home In general, you are eligible for the exclusion if you have owned and used your home as your main home for a period aggregating at least two years out of the five years prior to its sale. Refer to Publication 523 for the complete eligibility requirements as well as exceptions to the two year rule. Report the sale of your main home only if you have a gain that is not excluded from your income. In most cases, if you have a gain that is not excluded, you must report it on Form 1040, Schedule D (PDF), Capital Gains and Losses. IRS gov web site use the search box for Publication 523 Selling Your Home Main Home This section explains the term "main home." Usually, the home you live in most of the time is your main home. Click on the below Related Link
Capital gain is when the sale of an item or asset is higher than the original price of purchase, the extra amount after the original sale price has been deducted is known as the capital gain.
1) Generally it is very difficult to shift income to a child. 2) Why shift capital gain income anyway, it's the same rate for everyone? 3) Primary residences are exempt from gains, unless something like a million $. 4) Any tax, especially on sale of a residence, can depend much on what you do with the proceeds, and the reason for the sale.
If you had the home as your primary residence within the past 2 years, you will not have the pay the taxes. This is as long as you did not gain more than $250,000 from the sale.Ê
no, it can be capital gain or loss
If you hold the asset for MORE than one year before you dispose of it, and you have a gain on the sale your capital gain would be a LONG TERM CAPITAL GAIN (LTCG)
Yes, you are subject to capital gains tax on the gain on the sale of your principal residence that exceeds the maximum exclusion ($250,000 if Single / $500,000 if Married Filing Joint.) The old rule allowed you to defer paying tax on a home sale by "buying up" and rolling the gain into the new residence. You do that by reducing the basis of the new residence. Note that the old rule was always intended as a deferral of tax, not a tax exclusion. Because you were allowed to defer tax on prior sales, the basis of your current residence is likely low. This results in a large gain on sale that, unfortunately, may put you over the maximum exclusion. Note, however, you will only be taxed on the portion of gain that exceeds the maximum exclusion. For example, if your gain is $600,000 and you file Married Filing Jointly, you will only be taxed on $100,000 of gain ($600,000 gain minus $500,000 exclusion.)